Hi !
Thanks for the great extension to block all kind of annoying ads first !

Then I would like to ask if it is possible to add adframe blocking support ?

Sometimes (with lycos eg http://membres.lycos.fr/sfam/forum/ and click any link) a frame dispalying google ads is shown on the right of the screen. Adblock can of course block the ads in it, also i think it can block the frame from being loaded, but still the <frameset width=xxx > is present, so that the space for the adframe is preserved...

Is there any way to implement a rewriting of the <frameset> tag if one or more frame from this frameset are removed, so the wasted space is converted in useful space ?

As you noted, Adblock does block frames. Adding this entry removed the ad-frame (Width included) from your example:
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Code:

http://ads.multimania.lycos.fr/ad/google/frame.php*

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Since frames are pretty much a base-tag, it doesn't strike me as useful to put an option in the context-menu. But the "Adblock-able Items" list shows them -- just click the statusbar-element.

More importantly, the frame in your example was created by a script. I'm not sure where you determined a 'framewidth' attribute as responsible, but if the above filter doesn't work for you, try blocking the page scripts. You'll also find them listed in "Adblock-able Items".

Thanks for your answer rue, but it didn't solve the problem, maybe you thought this due to a weird handling of the php code and the adframe (lycos let the first php page without adframe, then after a link is clicked shows the bar, also sometimes, when you simply click refresh, the adframe disappear, more or less randomly) BUT ! i made you a test page in pure html :

There you can test that blocking even the *ads* keyword, let a blank space at the right of the screen, in place of the adframe, i can figure out why !
The source code is pretty weird and i don't knwo that much about html and javascript..

kikidonk:
Adblock's FastCollapse feature was landed shortly after, and isn't compatible with the frameset-collapsation. FastCollapse bypasses the window-timeout that completely hides blocked elements, which means they still take up screen-space.
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Disable FastCollapse, and the previous behaviour will return.